Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, this, be afraid. Look it up. Racoon worms are deadly to all animals except racoons. They crawl up the spinal cord into the brain. There is no cure or treatment.Anonymous wrote:If he pooped, be careful of raccoon ringworm.
Wash the can far from anywhere children will play, wash your hands thoroughly, throw out any gloves or anything that contacts racoon poop. The worm cysts will not die in a washing machine or dryer. You could cook them and they'd still hatch if they are ingested.
Wait what? Deadly?
Think about this for two seconds. Raccoons are literally everywhere. Do you know any children who have died from raccoon worms? This is like people who freak out about mouse droppings.
Speak for yourself. I know several.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, this, be afraid. Look it up. Racoon worms are deadly to all animals except racoons. They crawl up the spinal cord into the brain. There is no cure or treatment.Anonymous wrote:If he pooped, be careful of raccoon ringworm.
Wash the can far from anywhere children will play, wash your hands thoroughly, throw out any gloves or anything that contacts racoon poop. The worm cysts will not die in a washing machine or dryer. You could cook them and they'd still hatch if they are ingested.
Wait what? Deadly?
Think about this for two seconds. Raccoons are literally everywhere. Do you know any children who have died from raccoon worms? This is like people who freak out about mouse droppings.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, this, be afraid. Look it up. Racoon worms are deadly to all animals except racoons. They crawl up the spinal cord into the brain. There is no cure or treatment.Anonymous wrote:If he pooped, be careful of raccoon ringworm.
Wash the can far from anywhere children will play, wash your hands thoroughly, throw out any gloves or anything that contacts racoon poop. The worm cysts will not die in a washing machine or dryer. You could cook them and they'd still hatch if they are ingested.
Wait what? Deadly?
Think about this for two seconds. Raccoons are literally everywhere. Do you know any children who have died from raccoon worms? This is like people who freak out about mouse droppings.
Anonymous wrote:Taking out trash this morning and open lid and raccoon jumps out. Think it’s been in their for a few days, it smells the worst thing imaginable which is a lot for a trash can.
Any recs on how to clean it and prevent another visit. I want to burn the can, he must have pooped in their, smells so bad.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, this, be afraid. Look it up. Racoon worms are deadly to all animals except racoons. They crawl up the spinal cord into the brain. There is no cure or treatment.Anonymous wrote:If he pooped, be careful of raccoon ringworm.
Wash the can far from anywhere children will play, wash your hands thoroughly, throw out any gloves or anything that contacts racoon poop. The worm cysts will not die in a washing machine or dryer. You could cook them and they'd still hatch if they are ingested.
Wait what? Deadly?
Anonymous wrote:Yes, this, be afraid. Look it up. Racoon worms are deadly to all animals except racoons. They crawl up the spinal cord into the brain. There is no cure or treatment.Anonymous wrote:If he pooped, be careful of raccoon ringworm.
Wash the can far from anywhere children will play, wash your hands thoroughly, throw out any gloves or anything that contacts racoon poop. The worm cysts will not die in a washing machine or dryer. You could cook them and they'd still hatch if they are ingested.
Yes, this, be afraid. Look it up. Racoon worms are deadly to all animals except racoons. They crawl up the spinal cord into the brain. There is no cure or treatment.Anonymous wrote:If he pooped, be careful of raccoon ringworm.
Anonymous wrote:My husband's cousin in downtown Toronto locks her trash cans, because they can do what PP described, and work as a team to open them up. These are city trash cans supposedly designed to keep raccoons out, but no, she still needs an extra lock.
I would rinse the trash can with a bleach solution, hose it down, and air it out.
We're not the only intelligent species out there...
